The shackles of tradition - Franz Boas (1858-1942)

Central Television's major documentary series looks at the first anthropologists to stop 'armchair theorising' and go out to live among the peoples who so interested them. In 1883, a young German scientist - Franz Boas - arrived in the Canadian Arctic to map the coastline and indulge...

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Author: Alexander Street Press
Other Authors: Dakowski, Bruce (Narrator), Singer, André, 1945- (Director, Producer), Singer, André, 1945- (Director, Producer)
Format: Unknown
Language:English
Published: London, UK : Royal Anthropological Institute, 1986
London, UK : 1986
Series:Ethnographic video online, volume 2
Subjects:
Description
Summary:Central Television's major documentary series looks at the first anthropologists to stop 'armchair theorising' and go out to live among the peoples who so interested them. In 1883, a young German scientist - Franz Boas - arrived in the Canadian Arctic to map the coastline and indulge in his new interest the study of other cultures. As he charted Baffin Island, he recorded the lives and ideas of the Eskimo who helped him with his work. He became so absorbed by the common features that unite humans everywhere that he made the study of culture his life's work and did fieldwork in both the Arctic and the North West Coast of America among Indian tribes. Considered to be the founding father of American anthropology, Boas taught at Columbia University, encouraging his students to follow his example by actually working in the field
Item Description:Title from resource description page (viewed Feb. 27, 2013)
Title from title frames (Ethnographic video online, viewed Feb. 27, 2013)
Physical Description:1 online resource (53 min.)
Previously released as DVD
Playing Time:00:53:40
Access:Restricted for use by site license